Case Information
*3
BERZON, Circuit Judge:
This case concerns California’s generous program of
home- and community-based care for developmentally
disabled residents. To fund its program, California relies in
large part on federal money provided under the Medicaid Act
(“the Act”), 42 U.S.C. §§ 1396–1396w-5. California has
reduced the funding for this program, as it has for other
Medicaid-funded programs at various times, and, as in the
past, affected groups have challenged the reductions. We
therefore are obliged to address once again the scope of the
state’s federal obligations under the Act to compensate for
covered services.
See, e.g.
,
Managed Pharmacy Care v.
Sebelius
, 716 F.3d 1235 (9th Cir. 2013);
Developmental
Servs. Network v. Douglas
,
In this instance, beginning in 2009, the California legislature enacted a series of statutes reducing the state’s compensation, partially funded under the federal Medicaid Act, of home- and community-based services provided to developmentally disabled persons. The plaintiffs in this case, Arc of California and the United Cerebral Palsy Association of San Diego (together, “Arc”) — non-profit organizations representing developmentally disabled persons, their families, and the organizations that serve them — allege that California’s implementation of those statutes was inconsistent with the Medicaid Act; violated the federal Americans with Disabilities Act (“ADA”), 42 U.S.C. § 12132, and the federal Rehabilitation Act, 29 U.S.C. § 794(a); and was invalid under California’s Lanterman Developmental Disabilities Services Act, Cal. Welf. & Inst. Code §§ 4500–4869. Arc sought preliminary injunctive relief against the continued enforcement of California’s recently enacted statutes. The district court denied that motion and, in a simultaneously released order, dismissed Arc’s Medicaid Act claims, reasoning that those claims are meritless and that Arc had not demonstrated a likelihood of irreparable harm.
We hold that the district court abused its discretion in denying Arc’s motion for a preliminary injunction, because it misconstrued the Medicaid Act and applied deference to a federal agency decision where none was due. We also assert pendent appellate jurisdiction over the dismissal of Arc’s Medicaid Act claims, which relied on exactly the same reasoning, and reverse.
We cannot on this appeal, however, go beyond correcting the district court’s statutory interpretation to determining the propriety of preliminary injunctive relief. The primary state statute Arc challenges expired while the case was on appeal, so that challenge is moot. While the two other challenged statutes remain in effect, their impact was not the focus of the preliminary injunction proceeding. The current record is *5 6 T HE A RC OF C ALIFORNIA V . D OUGLAS therefore inadequate to adjudge whether that impact amounts to irreparable harm. We therefore remand to allow augmentation of the record and reconsideration of the propriety of injunctive relief in the changed circumstances, applying the correct irreparable harm analysis.
I.
California established under its Lanterman Act, Cal. Welf. & Inst. Code §§ 4500–4869, a comprehensive statutory scheme that seeks
“to prevent or minimize the institu- tionalization of developmentally disabled persons and their dislocation from family and community, and to enable them to approx- imate the pattern of everyday living of non- disabled persons of the same age and to lead more independent and productive lives in the community.”
Sanchez v. Johnson
, 416 F.3d 1051, 1064 (9th Cir. 2005)
(quoting
Ass’n for Retarded Citizens v. Dep’t of
Developmental Servs.
,
Under the Lanterman Act, developmentally disabled persons receive services through providers under contract with a “regional center.” Cal. Code Regs. tit. 17, §§ 50602(n)–(o), 54010. A regional center is “a diagnostic, counseling, and service coordination center for developmentally disabled persons and their families” that operates as a “private nonprofit community agency or corporation acting as a contracting agency.” Cal. Code Regs. tit. 17, § 54302(a)(54). Regional centers receive funding from the state, among other sources. See Cal. Welf. & Inst. Code §§ 4620, 4659.
California, in turn, receives some of the funding for its
Lanterman Act programs through the federal Medicaid
program.
See
Cal. Welf. & Inst. Code § 4659(a)(1). State
participation in Medicaid is not compulsory, but participating
states must comply with the Act and the regulations that
*6
implement it.
See, e.g.
,
Managed Pharmacy Care
, 716 F.3d
at 1241. The Act conditions receipt of federal funds on
approval of a “state plan,”
see, e.g.
, 42 U.S.C. §§ 1396-1,
1396b(a), which “is a comprehensive written statement
submitted by the [state] agency describing the nature and
scope of its Medicaid program and giving assurance that it
will be administered in conformity” with the Act and its
accompanying regulations, 42 C.F.R. § 430.10. The
Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services
(“Secretary”) administers the Act,
see, e.g.
,
Managed
Pharmacy Care
,
The Medicaid Act authorizes the Secretary to waive certain of the Act’s otherwise-applicable requirements by granting a so-called home- and community-based services (“HCBS”) waiver. See 42 U.S.C. § 1396n(c). That waiver provision originated
[i]n 1981, in response to the fact that a disproportionate percentage of Medicaid resources were being used for long-term institutional care and studies showing that many persons residing in Medicaid-funded institutions would be capable of living at home or in the community if additional support services were available . . . . The HCBS program allows a variety of noninstitutional care options for persons who would otherwise be eligible for Medicaid benefits in an institution, but who would prefer to live at home or in the community.
Sanchez
,
California participates in Medicaid via a state plan that includes an HCBS waiver. In late June 2011, California submitted an application to renew its HCBS waiver for the five-year period between 2011 and 2016. CMS ultimately approved the application, after extending the previous waiver renewal, in a two-page letter.
Plaintiffs are two non-profit organizations whose members are developmentally disabled individuals, their families, and providers of home- and community-based services under the Lanterman Act program. They challenge state officials’ implementation of three new policies relating to state funding of home- and community-based services to developmentally disabled persons, adopted in a series of statutes enacted beginning in 2009.
First, the California legislature directed regional centers to reduce funding for services provided under the Lanterman Act by three percent. See 2009 Cal. Stat. 4296, 4306, § 10(a). That statute, which we will refer to as the “percentage payment reduction,” was initially set to expire on June 30, 2010. Id. In three subsequent acts, the California legislature extended the expiration date of, and modified the magnitude of, the percentage payment reduction, first up to 4.25 percent and later down to 1.25 percent. See 2010 Cal. Stat. 4718, 4811, § 164; 2011 Cal. Stat. 1640, 1662, § 24; 2012 Cal. Stat. 1056, 1087, § 34. Each iteration of the statute included an exemption authorizing regional centers to avoid the percentage payment reduction upon demonstrating that “a nonreduced payment is necessary to protect the health and safety of the individual for whom the services and supports are proposed to be purchased, and the State Department of Developmental Services has granted prior written approval.” 2009 Cal. Stat. 4296, 4306, § 10(a); 2010 Cal. Stat. 4718, 4811, § 164; 2011 Cal. Stat. 1640, 1662, § 24; 2012 Cal. Stat. 1056, 1087, § 34. The percentage payment reduction expired on June 30, 2013, while this appeal was pending but before we took the case under submission, and was not reenacted. See 2012 Cal. Stat. 1056, 1087, § 34.
Second, the California legislature mandated what the parties term the “uniform holiday schedule.” 2009 Cal. Stat. 5144, 5173, § 26 (codified at Cal. Welf. & Inst. Code § 4692). That provision precludes regional centers from compensating many services rendered on 14 enumerated days *8 10 T HE A RC OF C ALIFORNIA V . D OUGLAS over the course of each year. See Cal. Welf. & Inst. Code § 4692(a)–(b).
Third, the California legislature enacted what the parties have dubbed the “half-day billing rule.” 2011 Cal. Stat. 1640, 1659–60, § 21 (codified at Cal. Welf. & Inst. Code § 4690.6). That rule generally requires service providers seeking reimbursement for providing services at certain types of facilities for less than 65 percent of an approved program day to charge the state for a half day of service, rather than a full day. Cal. Welf. & Inst. Code § 4690.6(b).
State officials deposed in this litigation acknowledged that the state neither conducted nor relied upon any study to evaluate the effects of these three policies on home- and community-based service providers or on the developmentally disabled persons they serve. Nor does the record indicate that California ever submitted an SPA to CMS before implementing any of these new policies.
Arc has submitted numerous declarations from home- and community-based service providers for the developmentally disabled, stating that the cumulative effect of the three payment reductions has compromised their financial viability and forced them to reduce their services, to the detriment of their clients. Arc has also submitted declarations from several family members of developmentally disabled people, who agree that payment reductions have negatively affected the quality of the services upon which they and their disabled family members rely.
The state officials, for their part, dispute these assertions. They offer evidence that only two of the many declarants receiving services under the Lanterman Act formally *9 complained about the quality of their care, and no regional center sought a health and safety exemption under the percentage payment reduction statute on behalf of any of the declarants. They also indicate that the rate of reported injuries, accidents, and other adverse events for developmentally disabled persons receiving care under the Lanterman Act has decreased slightly since California implemented its new policies.
Arc initiated this lawsuit in late September 2011, alleging
that California’s implementation of its new policies was
inconsistent with the Medicaid Act, violated the federal ADA
and Rehabilitation Acts, and violated the Lanterman Act. It
first sought a preliminary injunction the following month.
The state officials subsequently moved to stay proceedings
pending the Supreme Court’s grant of certiorari in the cases
later remanded under the name
Douglas v. Independent
Living Center of Southern California, Inc.
,
[1] The Supreme Court granted certiorari in the cases consolidated in ILC II “to decide whether Medicaid providers and recipients may maintain a cause of action under the Supremacy Clause to enforce a federal Medicaid law . . . that, in their view, conflicts with (and pre-empts) state Medicaid statutes that reduce payments to providers.” Id. at 1207. Changed circumstances, however, prevented the Supreme Court from addressing the question on which it had granted certiorari. See id.
In late September 2012, the state officials filed a motion to dismiss. Several months later, Arc filed the operative motion for a preliminary injunction on the basis of its Medicaid Act, ADA, and Rehabilitation Act claims. [2] The district court heard oral argument on the motion for a preliminary injunction and the motion to dismiss in late January 2013. On July 1, 2013, the district court issued two orders, one denying Arc’s motion for a preliminary injunction, the other dismissing Arc’s Medicaid Act claims but allowing its remaining claims to move forward. This timely appeal followed.
II.
At the outset, we hold that the expiration of the statute enacting California’s percentage payment reduction moots Arc’s challenges to it, although its challenges to the uniform holiday schedule and half-day billing rule, neither of which has expired, remain live.
Ordinarily, a claim is moot on appeal if it “‘loses its
character as a live controversy,’”
Cal. Ass’n of Rural Health
Clinics v. Douglas
, 738 F.3d 1007, 1017 (9th Cir. 2013)
(quoting
Doe v. Madison Sch. Dist. No. 321
,
the “general rule [that], if a challenged law is repealed or
expires, the case becomes moot.”
Native Vill. of Noatak v.
Blatchford
,
Arc replies that its challenge to the percentage rate reductions is not moot, relying on the exception to the mootness doctrine for cases that
fall[] within a special category of disputes that are “capable of repetition” while “evading review.” S. Pac. Terminal Co. v. ICC ,219 U.S. 498 , 515 (1911). A dispute falls into that category, and a case based on that dispute remains live, if “(1) the challenged action [is] in its duration too short to be fully litigated prior to its cessation or expiration, and (2) there [is] a reasonable expectation that the same complaining party [will] be subjected to the same action again.” Weinstein v. Bradford , 423 U.S. 147, 149 (1975) (per curiam).
Turner v. Rogers
,
As to repetition, Arc contends that the California
legislature’s previous reenactments of the percentage
payment reduction render reasonable the expectation of its
recurrence.
See, e.g.
,
Alcoa, Inc. v. Bonneville Power Admin.
,
First, we have hesitated to hold reasonable the expectation
that complex political action motivated by fiscal scarcity will
recur.
Foster v. Carson
rejected as unreasonable the
expectation that Oregon would reenact a judicial-budget
austerity measure that suspended for four months the
proceedings of certain indigent criminal defendants, as well
as their access to counsel.
[t]he economic condition of the state is constantly fluctuating. How the political branches of the state will choose to fund indigent defense, how many indigent defendants will require services, whether a shortfall will occur, and how the state judicial system would address such a shortfall are all unknown. We therefore cannot say that there is a “reasonable expectation” that . . . [a similar austerity measure] will be issued again in the future.
Id. at 748. Foster suggests that where, as here, challenged conduct requires the confluence of a series of complicated political and fiscal contingencies, the probability of its recurrence to some extent decreases.
Second, our resolution of Arc’s remaining challenges also contributes to our conclusion that this sort of percentage rate reduction is unlikely to recur. As explained below, we hold that Arc is likely to succeed on their challenges to
T HE A RC OF C ALIFORNIA V . D OUGLAS
15
California’s uniform holiday schedule and half-day billing
rule, as California has taken no steps to comply with Section
30(A) with regard to them. Those policies have not expired,
and Arc’s primary procedural challenge to them is nearly
identical to its objections to the now-expired rate reductions.
Given our construction of the law as it relates to those parallel
claims, “[w]e cannot reasonably expect that [California] will
ignore” its legal obligations, which we clarify in this opinion.
Cal. Ass’n
,
We turn now to those parallel claims.
III.
“‘A plaintiff seeking a preliminary injunction must
establish that he is likely to succeed on the merits, that he is
likely to suffer irreparable harm in the absence of preliminary
relief, that the balance of equities tips in his favor, and that an
injunction is in the public interest.’”
Alliance for the Wild
Rockies v. Cottrell
, 632 F.3d 1127, 1131 (9th Cir. 2011)
(quoting
Winter v. Natural Res. Def. Council
,
We review for abuse of discretion the district court’s
denial of a preliminary injunction.
Id.
at 1131. A district
court abuses its discretion when its decision relies “‘on an
erroneous legal standard or clearly erroneous finding of
fact.’”
Id.
(quoting
Lands Council v. McNair
,
We hold that the district court in this case abused its discretion when it denied a preliminary injunction. Its evaluation of Arc’s likelihood of success on the merits relied on erroneous legal standards. And it premised its analysis of irreparable harm and balancing of the equities on factual findings that were either illogical or lacked support in the record. We thus reverse the district court but, because of the changed circumstances brought about by the mootness of the percentage payment reduction challenge, remand the matter for its reconsideration.
A.
Arc argues that California’s implementation of its half-
day billing rule and uniform holiday schedule was
inconsistent with the Medicaid Act, because the state failed
entirely to study the effects of those reductions, as required
by Section 30(A) of the Medicaid Act.
[3]
The district court
[3]
The state officials suggest that, even if the state did violate the
Medicaid Act when it enacted the compensation changes to the HCBS
waiver program, the challenge cannot go forward, citing
ILC II
, 132 S. Ct.
1204. Not so. “[A] private party may bring suit under the Supremacy
Clause to enjoin implementation of state legislation allegedly preempted
17
rejected that argument, construing CMS’s approval of
California’s 2011–2016 waiver renewal application as a
determination that California’s payment reductions complied
with the Medicaid Act, and viewing that approval as an
agency decision entitled to judicial deference. In doing so,
the district court misconstrued the Medicaid Act and deferred
to an agency determination that did not address, even
implicitly, the questions raised in the district court and here. by federal law.”
Indep. Living Ctr. of S. Cal., Inc. v. Shewry
, 543 F.3d
1050, 1065 (9th Cir. 2008) (“
ILC I
”).
ILC II
vacated, on the basis of
changed circumstances, the seven judgments of this court over which the
Supreme Court had exercised jurisdiction, expressly reserving the question
we decided in
ILC I
.
See ILC II
,
1. Section 30(A) of the Medicaid Act conditions a state’s
receipt of Medicaid funds on its provision of
such methods and procedures relating to the utilization of, and the payment for, care and services available under the [state Medicaid] plan . . . as may be necessary to safeguard against unnecessary utilization of such care and services and to assure that payments are consistent with efficiency, economy, and quality of care and are sufficient to enlist enough providers so that care and services are available under the plan at least to the extent that such care and services are available to the general population in the geographic area.
42 U.S.C. § 1396a(a)(30)(A).
The district court began its legal analysis of Arc’s likelihood of success on the merits by accepting the state officials’ position that a state participating in the HCBS program, via an HCBS waiver, need not comply with Section 30(A) with regard to the HCBS program. That proposition is incorrect.
The Medicaid Act conditions receipt of federal funds on
a state’s compliance with “a laundry list of requirements that
[a] state plan ‘must’ satisfy, 42 U.S.C. § 1396a(a), and an
extensive body of regulations
implements
these
requirements.”
Alaska Dep’t of Health & Soc. Servs. v. Ctrs.
*15
for Medicare & Medicaid Servs.
,
1. The “statewideness” rule, which requires a state plan to “provide that it shall be in effect in all political subdivisions of the State, and, if administered by them, be mandatory upon them.” 42 U.S.C. § 1396a(a)(1).
2. The “comparability” rule, which prohibits a state plan from providing certain specified recipients of medical services with services that are “less in amount, duration, or scope than the medical assistance made available to” other recipients of services under the plan. 42 U.S.C. § 1396a(a)(10)(B).
3. Various income and resource rules, which restrict services to the very neediest members of the community. See 42 U.S.C. § 1396a(a)(10)(C)(i)(III).
Under some circumstances, the Medicaid Act authorizes the Secretary to waive a state plan’s compliance with certain of the Act’s otherwise-mandatory statutory requirements. See 42 U.S.C. § 1396n(b)–(e). “Waivers are intended to provide the flexibility needed to enable States to try new or different approaches to the efficient and cost-effective delivery of health care services, or to adapt their programs to the special needs of particular areas or groups of beneficiaries.” 42 C.F.R. § 430.25(b). This appeal implicates one such *16 20 T HE A RC OF C ALIFORNIA V . D OUGLAS statutory waiver, the HCBS waiver. See 42 U.S.C. § 1396n(c).
The Medicaid Act provision governing HCBS waivers specifies that
[a] waiver granted under this subsection [authorizing home- and community-based services waivers] may include a waiver of the requirements of section 1396a(a)(1) of this title (relating to statewideness), section 1396a(a)(10)(B) of this title (relating to comparability), and section 1396a(a)(10)(C)(i)(III) of this title (relating to income and resource rules applicable in the community).
42 U.S.C. § 1396n(c)(3); see also 42 C.F.R. § 430.25(d)(2) (listing only these three provisions as those which “may be waived”). Thus, the Medicaid Act’s authorization of HCBS waivers permits the Secretary, by granting such a waiver, to relieve a state from compliance with three — and only three — of the otherwise-mandatory requirements on which the Medicaid Act conditions receipt of federal funds. [5]
The list of waivable requirements in 42 U.S.C.
§ 1396n(c)(3) is exclusive. Nothing in the HCBS waiver
provision provides the Secretary with authority to waive any
other
of the Medicaid Act’s requirements when granting an
[5]
The statute also conditions the grant of an HCBS waiver on, inter alia,
assurance that the state will provide safeguards to protect the health and
welfare of beneficiaries, as well as cost-neutrality and certain financial
oversight measures.
See
42 U.S.C. § 1396n(c)(2). The Secretary
implements these requirements via 42 C.F.R. §§ 441.300–441.310.
HCBS waiver. The “‘presumption that when a statute
designates certain persons, things, or manners of operation,
all omissions should be understood as exclusions’” thus
comes into play.
Silvers v. Sony Pictures Entm’t
, 402 F.3d
881, 885 (9th Cir. 2005) (en banc) (quoting
Boudette v.
Barnette
,
First, a comparison with the language of the surrounding statutory subsections confirms that an HCBS waiver may relieve a state of compliance with only the three otherwise- mandatory requirements referenced in 42 U.S.C. § 1396n(c)(3). Consider 42 U.S.C. § 1396n(b), which authorizes waivers designed to promote cost-effectiveness and efficiency. That subsection provides that
[t]he Secretary, to the extent he finds it to be cost-effective and efficient and not inconsistent with the purposes of this subchapter, may waive such requirements of section 1396a of this title . . . ( other than sections 1396a(a)(15), 1396a(bb), and 1396a(a)(10)(A) of this title insofar as it requires provision of the care and services described in section 1396d(a)(2)(C) of this title) as may be necessary.
42 U.S.C. § 1396n(b) (emphasis added); see also 42 C.F.R. § 431.55(a) (“Section 1915(b) of the Act authorizes the Secretary to waive most requirements of section 1902 of the Act to the extent he or she finds proposed improvements or specified practices in the provision of services under Medicaid to be cost effective, efficient, and consistent with the objectives of the Medicaid program.”). Section 1396n(b) is thus structured exactly inversely to the HCBS waiver provision; it authorizes the waiver of any otherwise- applicable requirement, except three. The existence of 42 U.S.C. § 1396n(b) one paragraph above the subsection authorizing HCBS waivers demonstrates that Congress carefully structured the statute to allow broad waivers in some instances and not others. See, e.g. , United States v. Yazzie , 743 F.3d 1278, 1292 (9th Cir. 2014). Far from authorizing a broad waiver for HCBS services, Congress instead chose for that purpose a narrowly circumscribed loosening of the statutory requirements.
Second, the Secretary’s own interpretation of its authority
to grant HCBS waivers further confirms that it is permitted to
waive only the three otherwise-applicable requirements of the
Medicaid Act enumerated in 42 U.S.C. § 1396n(c). The
Secretary’s regulation implementing the HCBS program
specifies that “the following requirements may be waived”
*18
under 42 U.S.C. § 1396n(c): the statewideness rule, the
comparability rule, and certain specified income and resource
rules. 42 C.F.R. § 430.25(d)(2). The regulation does not
indicate the availability under the HCBS waiver program of
broader permission to avoid the Medicaid Act’s requirements.
We defer to an agency’s reasonable interpretation of an
ambiguous statute it is charged with administering.
See
Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Res. Def. Council, Inc.
,
Properly understood, then, the HCBS waiver provision permits the Secretary to waive only three items on the “laundry list” of requirements a state must fulfill to receive funds under the Medicaid Act. Section 30(A) is not one of those waivable requirements. To participate in Medicaid, a state thus must comply with that provision with regard to the program allowed by the HCBS waiver, just as it must for its other Medicaid-covered programs.
The district court premised its contrary conclusion, in part, on 42 C.F.R. § 441.303(g), which authorizes a state “at its option . . . [to] provide for an independent assessment of its waiver that evaluates the quality of care provided, access to care, and cost-neutrality” when applying for an HCBS waiver. The district court thought that regulation “for all intents and purposes incorporates the considerations set forth in Section 30(A),” but does so as an option rather than a requirement, and so determined that compliance with Section 30(A) is not required of a state seeking an HCBS waiver.
The district court’s conclusion, however, does not follow from its premise, for three reasons. First, and most obviously, a regulation could not make optional a requirement the statute mandates. Second, although demonstrating compliance with Section 30(A) is not required for receipt of an HCBS waiver, that observation does not vitiate a state’s independent obligation to satisfy Section 30(A) as to the services covered by an HCBS waiver if the waiver is obtained, as part of its overall state plan obligation. *19 24 T HE A RC OF C ALIFORNIA V . D OUGLAS Third, the regulation allows for an “ independent assessment,” 42 C.F.R. § 441.303(g) (emphasis added), but does not negate the need for some assessment, whether by the state agency itself or an independent analyst.
In short, 42 C.F.R. § 441.303(g) does not detract from our conclusion that the HCBS waiver provision retains the Section 30(A) requirement for programs permitted by the waiver.
2. Given our understanding of the role of Section 30(A) for states with HCBS programs, Arc has a substantial likelihood of demonstrating that the state officials’ implementation of California’s uniform holiday schedule and half-day billing rule was inconsistent with Section 30(A). By adopting those policies without studying at all their likely effects on the efficiency, economy, quality of care, and access to care California offered the developmentally disabled, the state officials probably disregarded Section 30(A)’s express mandate.
Two precedents, read together, control our interpretation of Section 30(A) — Orthopaedic Hospital v. Belshe , 103 F.3d 1491 (9th Cir. 1997), and Managed Pharmacy Care , 716 F.3d 1235.
Orthopaedic Hospital considered the meaning of Section 30(A) before the Secretary had interpreted it. See 103 F.3d at 1495–96. Faced with CMS’s silence, we held that a state could not comply with Section 30(A) without “responsible cost studies, its own or others’, that provide reliable data as a basis for its rate setting,” reasoning that a state “cannot know that it is setting rates that are consistent with efficiency, *20 economy, quality of care and access without considering the costs of providing such services.” Id. at 1496.
Managed Pharmacy Care , in turn, evaluated Section 30(A) in light of CMS’s later, formal approval of two SPAs, communicated in letters expressly stating that the SPAs in those instances were consistent with Section 30(A). 716 F.3d at 1243, 1245. In support of those SPAs, the state had submitted to CMS “access studies” that “reviewed data focused primarily on enrollee needs, provider availability, and utilization of services.” Id. at 1242. It also submitted studies of provider costs for some, but not all, of the services affected by the SPAs, as well as a detailed “monitoring plan” designed “to ensure the SPAs do not negatively affect beneficiary access.” Id. CMS’s approval indicated that, in the agency’s opinion, a state’s completion of such access studies, a monitoring plan, and some cost studies was sufficient to comply with Section 30(A). Id. at 1245. We deferred to that interpretation as a reasonable reading of Section 30(A)’s ambiguous mandate, noting that enforcement of Section 30(A) through approval or disapproval of state plans and their implementation is committed to the Secretary (and delegated, in large part, to CMS). Id. at 1250.
Managed Pharmacy Care emphasized that Section 30(A) “does not prescribe any particular methodology a State must follow before its proposed rates may be approved.” Id. at 1245 (emphasis added). It did not thereby relieve states from doing something to comply with Section 30(A), which expressly requires “methods and procedures” to fulfill its mandate. 42 U.S.C. § 1396a(a)(30)(A). Instead, Managed Pharmacy Care approved the affirmative measures enumerated by the state in that case as sufficient to meet the Section 30(A) requirements.
Here, the state officials do not dispute that California did nothing whatever to study the likely effects of its uniform holiday schedule or half-day billing rule on the “efficiency, economy, and quality of care” or the availability of service providers, before enacting and implementing those rules. The reasonable interpretation to which we deferred in Managed Pharmacy Care does not condone such complete abdication.
The district court nonetheless relied on Managed Pharmacy Care , reasoning that CMS’s approval of California’s HCBS waiver renewal application indicates that CMS believed California’s payment reductions consistent *21 with Section 30(A). Unlike in Managed Pharmacy Care , however, CMS’s approval of California’s waiver renewal application did not expressly conclude that the state’s new policies comply with Section 30(A). Nor will we infer such a conclusion, for two independently sufficient reasons.
First, California’s HCBS waiver renewal application did not disclose its recently implemented uniform holiday schedule or its new half-day billing rule. In approving that application, CMS could have reviewed, even inferentially, only matters presented in it. Because California’s HCBS waiver renewal application discussed neither the uniform holiday schedule nor the half-day billing rule, we have no reason to believe that CMS was aware of those policies, let alone that it impliedly approved them. [6] [6] The state officials informed CMS of the state’s now-expired percentage rate reductions, both in a meeting and, subsequently, in a written response to CMS’s written inquiry. They have not demonstrated, however, that they ever informed CMS of the uniform holiday schedule or the half-day billing rule.
The district court emphasized that California’s waiver renewal application included over 200 pages worth of material, some of which included data on the cost of the programs operated under the waiver and the rates at which those programs’ services were utilized. The Secretary requires such information as part of the waiver approval process, see 42 C.F.R. §§ 441.302(h), 441.303(f), so that CMS can evaluate a state’s compliance with the statutory requirements for an HCBS waiver. The statute requires, for example, per capita expenditures equal to what they would have been without a waiver and annual reporting on the type and amount of services provided. See 42 U.S.C. § 1396n(c)(2)(D)–(E). That information is not directly relevant to the considerations enumerated in Section 30(A), which, among other things, requires comparing service recipients’ access to care to that of the general population.
Second, the state’s failure to provide information on the uniform holiday schedule and half-day billing rule reflects the scope and purpose of the HCBS waiver application process. As discussed, see supra Part III.A.1, approval of an HCBS waiver does not affect the requirement that the state plan, overall, comply with all provisions of the Medicaid Act, including Section 30(A), that the Secretary has not waived. Pursuant to 42 C.F.R. § 430.25(g)(1), CMS “approves waiver *22 requests [under 42 U.S.C. § 1396n(b)–(c)] if the State’s proposed program or activity meets the requirements of the Act and the regulations at § 431.55 or subpart G of part 441 of this chapter[, 42 C.F.R. §§ 441.300–441.310].” Section 430.25 deals only with the waivers incorporated into state plans, not the state plans themselves. The approval of state plans is the subject of separate regulatory provisions. See, e.g. , 42 C.F.R. §§ 430.10–430.18. In particular, 42 C.F.R. § 430.25(g)(1) lists § 431.55 and 42 C.F.R. 28
§§ 441.300–441.310 as the relevant regulations considered for purposes of waiver approval; both of those regulations interpret only the statutory requirements for a waiver under 42 U.S.C. § 1396n(b)–(c), respectively. Thus, 42 C.F.R. § 430.25(g)(1) requires consideration for purposes of waiver approval of the waiver requirements of the Act and the implementing regulations, not of the separate, more generally applicable state plan requirements.
In relying on Managed Pharmacy Care , then, the district court applied the wrong legal standard to the case before it. Managed Pharmacy Care neither condones the sort of complete inaction California has demonstrated here nor compels our deference to CMS’s approval of the HCBS waiver application. [8] We conclude that California’s total [7] We note that the mention of “the Act” in 42 C.F.R. § 430.25(g)(1) necessarily refers to the Act’s waiver provisions. Section 430.25 in its entirety implements the waiver provisions of the Act only. In accord with that limitation, the regulations listed right after “the Act” in subsection (g)(1) deal only with waivers, not with state plans generally, although the regulations governing state plans generally are extensive. Application of the interpretive maxim that “a word is known by the company it keeps,” Gustafson v. Alloyd Co. , 513 U.S. 561, 575 (1995), counsels the understanding that 42 C.F.R. § 430.25(g)(1), like the larger section of which it is a part, is limited to assuring compliance with the statutory and regulatory waiver requirements, and that its reference to “the Act” is to the Act’s waiver provisions.
[8] The district court asserted that Arc’s ADA and Rehabilitation Act claims were premised on California’s alleged non-compliance with Section 30(A). The district court therefore concluded that the ADA and Rehabilitation Act claims fell alongside the Section 30(A) claim, all being equally unlikely to succeed on the merits. Because we hold the district court’s conclusion as to the Section 30(A) claim an abuse of discretion, its evaluation of the ADA and Rehabilitation Act claims — which relied on that conclusion — was equally erroneous.
T HE A RC OF C ALIFORNIA V . D OUGLAS 29 abdication of its obligations under Section 30(A) indicates that Arc is likely to prevail on the merits of its challenges under the Medicaid Act to the uniform holiday schedule and half-day billing rule. The district court abused its discretion in determining otherwise, and so in assessing Arc’s likelihood of success on the merits.
B.
“[P]laintiffs seeking preliminary relief [must] demonstrate that irreparable injury is likely in the absence of an injunction,” not merely that it is possible. Winter , 555 U.S. at 22. The district court determined that no such injury was likely here. After reviewing the record carefully, we conclude that each of the factual bases on which the district court premised its decision was either clearly erroneous or legally irrelevant.
1. The district court first invoked Oakland Tribune, Inc. v. Chronicle Publishing Co. , which held that a plaintiff’s “long delay before seeking a preliminary injunction implies a lack of urgency and irreparable harm.” 762 F.2d 1374, 1377 (9th Cir. 1985). Because “the payment reductions at issue were in place more than two years before suit was filed on behalf of Plaintiffs in 2011,” the district court reasoned, Arc’s delay “weighs against irreparable harm.” The district court also appears to have misconstrued the scope of Arc’s ADA and Rehabilitation Act claims. Arc premised those claims not just on California’s alleged non-compliance with Section 30(A), but also on the allegation that California’s policies increased the risk of institutionalization to the disabled, and thus constituted discrimination. See M.R. , 697 F.3d at 734–35. On remand, the district court should consider that argument to the extent, if any, pertinent to determining the propriety of preliminary relief.
The record, however, does not support the finding that two years passed between the enactment of the relevant statutes and the filing of this lawsuit. True, the California *24 legislature enacted the first percentage payment reduction measure, which decreased payments by three percent, over two years before Arc brought suit. But Arc also challenges the extension and expansion of that measure in two subsequent statutes passed one year and three months, respectively, before this lawsuit was filed. In any case, the expiration of that percentage payment reduction measure during the pendency of this appeal renders it moot. See supra Part II.
Significantly for present purposes, one of the two provisions as to which Arc’s challenge is not moot, the half- day billing rule, was passed only months before the initiation of this lawsuit. Although the uniform holiday schedule had been in effect for nearly two years, the injury Arc alleges here is inherently cumulative, turning on the aggregate effect over time of the several payment reductions. It is the implementation of all the challenged statutes, not the first, that is relevant for irreparable harm purposes. The district court’s finding that the constellation of payment reductions challenged here was in effect for over two years is thus contradicted by the record, making it clearly erroneous.
For the district court’s benefit on remand, we add that it
is unlikely that Arc’s putative delay is especially probative
here. Usually, delay is but a single factor to consider in
evaluating irreparable injury; courts are “loath to withhold
relief solely on that ground.”
Lydo Enters., Inc. v. City of Las
Vegas
, 745 F.2d 1211, 1214 (9th Cir. 1984). Although a
plaintiff’s failure to seek judicial protection can imply “‘the
lack of need for speedy action,’”
id.
at 1213 (quoting
Gillette
Co. v. Ed Pinaud, Inc.
, 178 F. Supp. 618, 622 (S.D.N.Y.
1959)), such tardiness is not particularly probative in the
context of ongoing, worsening injuries. Here, for example,
the alleged injuries resulted from various cuts in
compensation, enacted over a period of time and having a
cumulative impact. In such circumstances, the magnitude of
the potential harm becomes apparent gradually, undermining
any inference that the plaintiff was “‘sleeping on its rights.’”
Id.
(quoting
Gillette Co.
,
2. The district court next emphasized Arc’s inability to demonstrate that any regional center had sought a statutory exemption from the percentage payment reduction as “necessary to protect the health and safety of” service recipients. Because Arc’s motion to enjoin that percentage payment reduction has been mooted by its expiration, see supra Part II, the district court’s observation is no longer directly relevant. As the district court itself recognized, the statutes enacting the uniform holiday schedule and half-day billing rule authorize no parallel exemptions.
Moreover, we doubt there is a logical connection between the regional centers ’ ability to seek exemptions and irreparable harm done to service providers . The record suggests that at least one regional center refused to submit an exemption request on behalf of a beleaguered service provider.
In sum, as applied to the two surviving statutes, there is no significance to the absence of applications for statutory exemptions from the now-expired statute.
3. Last, the district court emphasized the paucity of evidence indicating that developmentally disabled persons have already suffered from the payment reductions. Whether that is so is not legally relevant. That the service providers have managed to continue to provide care notwithstanding the reductions does not detract from the harm the providers face with regard to their continued viability.
Arc has brought this suit on behalf of — and moved for preliminary injunctive relief to prevent irreparable harm to — their members, including both the providers and the recipients of services. Whether service recipients have already suffered from reductions of services does not bear on whether these payment reductions currently threaten the continued viability of those who serve them, and so irreparably, if not immediately, threaten the future availability of services for the service recipients. So, to the extent the district court extrapolated from the lack of evidence of past harm to service recipients a lack of evidence of harm to the ability of service providers to continue to provide care, the extrapolation was illogical and thus an abuse of discretion.
We conclude that clearly erroneous factfinding marred the district court’s evaluation of the irreparable harms facing Arc.
C.
When ruling on a preliminary injunction, “a court must
balance the competing claims of injury and must consider the
effect on each party of the granting or withholding of the
requested relief.”
Amoco Prod. Co. v. Vill. of Gambell
,
D.
In conclusion, we hold that Arc has a substantial likelihood of success on the merits of its Medicaid Act claims, and we hold that the district court abused its discretion in certain respects in evaluating the harm suffered by Arc’s members. We do not, however, direct the issuance of a preliminary injunction.
The current record is insufficient to permit our independent evaluation of the harms threatening Arc’s members, the balance of the equities, or the public interest implicated by an injunction. That record was assembled before the expiration of the percentage payment reductions. Although the evidence it contains describes some of the consequences of the uniform holiday schedule and half-day billing rule, it much more often refers to the aggregate effect *27 34 T HE A RC OF C ALIFORNIA V . D OUGLAS of those policies and the now-expired percentage payment reductions. Given that those reductions became moot on appeal, the record must be developed anew to permit proper evaluation of the motion for preliminary injunctive relief.
Where the propriety of an injunction “raise[s] intensely
factual issues,” the matter “should be decided in the first
instance by the district court.”
Alaska Wilderness Recreation
& Tourism Ass’n v. Morrison
, 67 F.3d 723, 732 (9th Cir.
1995) (internal quotation marks omitted). The threat of
irreparable harm to Arc, the balancing of the equities, and the
public interest implicated by an injunction present precisely
such intensely factual questions. “Because the grant of a
preliminary injunction is a matter committed to the discretion
of the trial judge, we remand this case to the district court for
consideration of the remaining
Winter
factors in the first
instance.”
Evans v. Shoshone-Bannock Land Use Policy
Comm’n
, 736 F.3d 1298, 1307 (9th Cir. 2013) (internal
quotation marks, citation, and brackets omitted);
accord
Diouf v. Mukasey
,
IV.
In addition to its preliminary injunction appeal, Arc challenges the order dismissing its Medicaid Act claims under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6).
Standing on its own, the district court order dismissing the
Medicaid Act claims would lie beyond our jurisdiction. It
was not a final decision under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. The district
court did not dismiss Arc’s claims under the ADA,
Rehabilitation Act, and Lanterman Act and thus “did not
dispose of the action as to
all
claims between the parties.”
Prellwitz v. Sisto
,
The dismissal order, however, does not appear before us
on its own. It arises in connection with the district court’s
denial of Arc’s motion for preliminary injunctive relief, an
interlocutory order over which we do have jurisdiction.
See
28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1). Under such circumstances, “we
may
also exercise pendent appellate jurisdiction over any
‘otherwise non-appealable ruling [that] is inextricably
intertwined with or necessary to ensure meaningful review of
the order properly before us on interlocutory appeal.’”
Melendres v. Arpaio
, 695 F.3d 990, 996 (9th Cir. 2012)
(some internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting
Meredith v.
Oregon
,
36
“‘[D]istrict court rulings are inextricably intertwined with a preliminary injunction when the legal theories on which the issues advance [are] . . . so intertwined that we must decide the pendent issue in order to review the claims properly raised on interlocutory appeal, or . . . resolution of the issue properly raised on interlocutory appeal necessarily resolves the pendent issue.’” Melendres , 695 F.3d at 996 (second alteration in original) (some internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting Hendricks v. Bank of Am., N.A. , 408 F.3d 1127, 1134 (9th Cir. 2005)). For this latter reason, a pendent order that concerns the same legal issue and relies on the selfsame reasoning as the order over which this Court exercises primary appellate jurisdiction usually qualifies as “inextricably intertwined.”
Conversely, two issues are not inextricably intertwined
where their resolution requires “application of separate and
distinct legal standards.”
Meredith
, 321 F.3d at 815.
Standards are “separate and distinct” where they “‘turn on
wholly different factors.’”
Burlington N. & Santa Fe Ry.
,
*29
that resolves “‘all of the remaining issues presented by the
pendent appeal.’”
Huskey v. City of San Jose
,
Although the standards for a motion for preliminary
injunctive relief and dismissal under Rule 12(b)(6) are not
conterminous, they overlap where a court determines that the
plaintiff has no chance of success on the merits. “‘The
irreducible minimum [for a preliminary injunction] . . . is that
the moving party demonstrate a fair chance of success on the
merits or questions serious enough to require litigation. No
chance of success at all will not suffice.’”
E. & J. Gallo
Winery v. Andina Licores S.A.
,
Here, the district court refused to grant a preliminary injunction on Arc’s Medicaid Act claims for the selfsame reason it dismissed those claims. Both orders, which issued the same day, reasoned that CMS’s approval of California’s HCBS waiver application demonstrated the state’s compliance with the Medicaid Act, such that Arc had no *30 38
chance of succeeding on the merits. Indeed, several pages of both orders employed identical language.
We have held that the district court abused its discretion in determining that Arc had no chance of success on the merits. See supra Part III.A. To reach that holding, we necessarily reviewed the same legal considerations as underlay dismissal of those claims. We therefore reverse the dismissal of Arc’s Medicaid Act claims related to the uniform holiday schedule and half-day billing rule.
V.
In conclusion, we DISMISS as moot Arc’s challenges to the percentage payment reductions, REVERSE the district court’s denial of preliminary injunctive relief as an abuse of discretion, REMAND the matter for its reconsideration in the first instance, and REVERSE the dismissal of Arc’s Medicaid Act challenges to the uniform holiday schedule and half-day billing rule.
DISMISSED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, and REMANDED.
Each party shall bear its own costs on appeal.
[10]
A Second Circuit case may offer the closest analogy to the
circumstances presented here.
Lamar Advertising of Penn, LLC v. Town
of Orchard Park, New York
exercised pendent jurisdiction over an order
denying summary judgment “[b]ecause the district court . . . denied [the
plaintiff’s] request for a preliminary injunction for the very same reasons
it denied [the plaintiff’s] motion for summary judgment,” such that the
two orders were inextricably intertwined.
